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Why is Herodotus called “The Father of History”? - Mark Robinson

  • 0:07 - 0:09
    Giant gold-digging ants,
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    a furious king who orders
    the sea to be whipped 300 times,
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    and a dolphin that saves
    a famous poet from drowning.
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    These are just some of the stories
    from The Histories by Herodotus,
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    an Ancient Greek writer from
    the 5th century BCE.
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    Not all the events in the text
    may have happened
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    exactly as Herodotus reported them,
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    but this work revolutionized
    the way the past was recorded.
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    Before Herodotus, the past was documented
    as a list of events
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    with little or no attempt to explain
    their causes
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    beyond accepting things
    as the will of the gods.
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    Herodotus wanted a deeper,
    more rational understanding,
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    so he took a new approach:
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    looking at events from both sides
    to understand the reasons for them.
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    Though he was Greek, Herodotus's
    hometown of Halicarnassus
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    was part of the Persian Empire.
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    He grew up during a series of wars
    between the powerful Persians
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    and the smaller Greeks,
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    and decided to find out all he could
    about the subject.
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    In Herodotus's telling, the Persian Wars
    began in 499 BCE,
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    when the Athenians assisted a rebellion
    by Greeks living under Persian rule.
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    In 490, the Persian King, Darius,
    sent his army to take revenge on Athens.
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    But at the Battle of Marathon,
    the Athenians won an unexpected victory.
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    Ten years later, the Persians returned,
    planning to conquer the whole of Greece
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    under the leadership
    of Darius's son, Xerxes.
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    According to Herodotus,
    when Xerxes arrived,
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    his million man army was initially
    opposed by a Greek force
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    led by 300 Spartans at the mountain pass
    of Thermopylae.
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    At great cost to the Persians,
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    the Spartans and their king, Leonidas,
    were killed.
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    This heroic defeat has been an inspiration
    to underdogs ever since.
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    A few weeks later, the Greek navy
    tricked the Persian fleet
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    into fighting in a narrow sea channel
    near Athens.
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    The Persians were defeated and Xerxes
    fled, never to return.
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    To explain how these wars broke out
    and why the Greeks triumphed,
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    Herodotus collected stories
    from all around the Mediterranean.
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    He recorded the achievements of both
    Greeks and non-Greeks
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    before they were lost
    to the passage of time.
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    The Histories opens
    with the famous sentence:
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    "Herodotus, of Halicarnassus,
    here displays his inquiries."
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    By framing the book as an “inquiry,”
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    Herodotus allowed it to contain
    many different stories,
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    some serious, others less so.
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    He recorded the internal debates
    of the Persian court
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    but also tales of Egyptian flying snakes
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    and practical advice
    on how to catch a crocodile.
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    The Greek word for this method
    of research is "autopsy,"
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    meaning "seeing for oneself."
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    Herodotus was the first writer
    to examine the past
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    by combining the different kinds
    of evidence he collected:
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    opsis, or eyewitness accounts,
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    akoe, or hearsay,
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    and ta legomena, or tradition.
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    He then used gnome, or reason,
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    to reach conclusions
    about what actually happened.
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    Many of the book's early readers
    were actually listeners.
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    The Histories was originally written
    in 28 sections,
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    each of which took about
    four hours to read aloud.
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    As the Greeks increased in influence
    and power,
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    Herodotus's writing and the idea of history
    spread across the Mediterranean.
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    As the first proper historian,
    Herodotus wasn't perfect.
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    On occasions, he favored
    the Greeks over the Persians
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    and was too quick to believe
    some of the stories that he heard,
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    which made for inaccuracies.
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    However, modern evidence
    has actually explained
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    some of his apparently extreme claims.
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    For instance, there's a species
    of marmot in the Himalayas
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    that spreads gold dust while digging.
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    The ancient Persian word for marmot
    is quite close to the word for ant,
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    so Herodotus may have just fallen prey
    to a translation error.
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    All in all, for someone who was writing
    in an entirely new style,
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    Herodotus did remarkably well.
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    History, right down to the present day,
    has always suffered from the partiality
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    and mistakes of historians.
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    Herodotus’s method
    and creativity earned him the title
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    that the Roman author Cicero
    gave him several hundred years later:
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    "The Father of History."
Title:
Why is Herodotus called “The Father of History”? - Mark Robinson
Description:

View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-is-herodotus-called-the-father-of-history-mark-robinson

2,500 years ago, the writing of history as we know it didn’t exist. The past was recorded as a list of events, with little explanation for their causes beyond accepting things as the will of the gods. Herodotus wanted a deeper understanding, so he took a new approach: looking at events from both sides to understand the reasons for them. Mark Robinson explains how “history” came into being.

Lesson by Mark Robinson, directed by Remus and Kiki

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:03

English subtitles

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